King of
Jerusalem, son of Hezekiah,[1] who ruled Judaea for 55 years. He became most abominable and most sacrilegious and most lawless beyond all men through idolatry and bloodshed; and he provoked the great Isaiah and filled
Jerusalem with the blood of the innocents, and he worshiped idols no less than the Ammonites and they utterly defiled the house of the Lord and he stood up a four-faced idol of their god in it, and he did not cease from augury and mixing potions and being obscene and adulterous and committing every type of wickedness with excessiveness. And on account of this and according to divine anger, he was seized by King Marodach[2] of Babylon and carried off in chains to the city of Nineveh[3] as a captive and shut into a bronze statue. And when he understood that he received a deserved penalty for his faults, he asked the Lord to forgive him for his sins: for it was not a great praise to the Lord, if he would save the just man; but [it was a great praise of a Lord that was] good, if he would allow the repentence of a sinner. And the statue was shattered by divine might. And God blessed the king and sent him out into
Jerusalem. And when he returned he made every attempt at divine nature and trampled down the idolatrous temple; he cleansed the temple of God and upheld the law and built walls around the city and founded it anew and spoke justly and righteously. They gave him a small loaf of bran and a little water with a measure of cheap wine when he was bound and guarded in his bronze fetters in Babylon, so that he would just barely stay alive. And then he prayed to the Lord: "All-ruling Lord"; and God listened to his voice and freed him from his bonds and returned him to
Jerusalem; and serving the Lord with his whole heart he was reckoned a just man.
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